Date Format
WebSite, reference
All details will be given on https://momentjs.com/docs/#/displaying/format/
Raw Text of the website
hereafter is just a copy of the screen text to avoid to lose information in case the website disappears.
Token Output Month M 1 2 … 11 12
Mo 1st 2nd ... 11th 12th MM 01 02 ... 11 12 MMM Jan Feb ... Nov Dec MMMM January February ... November December
Quarter Q 1 2 3 4
Qo 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Day of Month D 1 2 … 30 31
Do 1st 2nd ... 30th 31st DD 01 02 ... 30 31
Day of Year DDD 1 2 … 364 365
DDDo 1st 2nd ... 364th 365th DDDD 001 002 ... 364 365
Day of Week d 0 1 … 5 6
do 0th 1st ... 5th 6th dd Su Mo ... Fr Sa ddd Sun Mon ... Fri Sat dddd Sunday Monday ... Friday Saturday
Day of Week (Locale) e 0 1 … 5 6 Day of Week (ISO) E 1 2 … 6 7 Week of Year w 1 2 … 52 53
wo 1st 2nd ... 52nd 53rd ww 01 02 ... 52 53
Week of Year (ISO) W 1 2 … 52 53
Wo 1st 2nd ... 52nd 53rd WW 01 02 ... 52 53
Year YY 70 71 … 29 30
YYYY 1970 1971 ... 2029 2030 Y 1970 1971 ... 9999 +10000 +10001
Note: This complies with the ISO 8601 standard for dates past the year 9999 Week Year gg 70 71 … 29 30
gggg 1970 1971 ... 2029 2030
Week Year (ISO) GG 70 71 … 29 30
GGGG 1970 1971 ... 2029 2030
AM/PM A AM PM
a am pm
Hour H 0 1 … 22 23
HH 00 01 ... 22 23 h 1 2 ... 11 12 hh 01 02 ... 11 12 k 1 2 ... 23 24 kk 01 02 ... 23 24
Minute m 0 1 … 58 59
mm 00 01 ... 58 59
Second s 0 1 … 58 59
ss 00 01 ... 58 59
Fractional Second S 0 1 … 8 9
SS 00 01 ... 98 99 SSS 000 001 ... 998 999 SSSS ... SSSSSSSSS 000[0..] 001[0..] ... 998[0..] 999[0..]
Time Zone z or zz EST CST … MST PST Note: as of 1.6.0, the z/zz format tokens have been deprecated from plain moment objects. Read more about it here. However, they *do* work if you are using a specific time zone with the moment-timezone addon.
Z -07:00 -06:00 ... +06:00 +07:00 ZZ -0700 -0600 ... +0600 +0700
Unix Timestamp X 1360013296 Unix Millisecond Timestamp x 1360013296123
X was added in 2.0.0.
e E gg gggg GG GGGG were added in 2.1.0.
x was added in 2.8.4.
SSSS to SSSSSSSSS were added in 2.10.5. They display 3 significant digits and the rest is filled with zeros.
k and kk were added in 2.13.0. Localized formats
Because preferred formatting differs based on locale, there are a few tokens that can be used to format a moment based on its locale.
There are upper and lower case variations on the same formats. The lowercase version is intended to be the shortened version of its uppercase counterpart. Time LT 8:30 PM Time with seconds LTS 8:30:25 PM Month numeral, day of month, year L 09/04/1986
l 9/4/1986
Month name, day of month, year LL September 4, 1986
ll Sep 4, 1986
Month name, day of month, year, time LLL September 4, 1986 8:30 PM
lll Sep 4, 1986 8:30 PM
Month name, day of month, day of week, year, time LLLL Thursday, September 4, 1986 8:30 PM
llll Thu, Sep 4, 1986 8:30 PM
l ll lll llll are available in 2.0.0. LTS was added in 2.8.4. Escaping characters
To escape characters in format strings, you can wrap the characters in square brackets.
moment().format('[today] dddd'); 'today Sunday' Similarities and differences with LDML Note: While these date formats are very similar to LDML date formats, there are a few minor differences regarding day of month, day of year, and day of week. For a breakdown of a few different date formatting tokens across different locales, see this chart of date formatting tokens. Formatting speed To compare Moment.js formatting speed against other libraries, check out this comparison against other libraries. Other tokens If you are more comfortable working with strftime instead of LDML-like parsing tokens, you can use Ben Oakes' plugin. benjaminoakes/moment-strftime. Default format Calling moment#format without a format will default to moment.defaultFormat. Out of the box, moment.defaultFormat is the ISO8601 format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ssZ. As of version 2.13.0, when in UTC mode, the default format is governed by moment.defaultFormatUtc which is in the format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss[Z]. This returns Z as the offset, instead of +00:00. In certain instances, a local timezone (such as Atlantic/Reykjavik) may have a zero offset, and will be considered to be UTC. In such cases, it may be useful to set moment.defaultFormat and moment.defaultFormatUtc to use the same formatting. Changing the value of moment.defaultFormat will only affect formatting, and will not affect parsing. for example: moment.defaultFormat = “DD.MM.YYYY HH:mm”; parse with .toDate() moment('20.07.2018 09:19').toDate() Invalid date format the date string with the new defaultFormat then parse moment('20.07.2018 09:19', moment.defaultFormat).toDate() Fri Jul 20 2018 09:19:00 GMT+0300